Build Your Own Virus
Wire Tap writes "Scientists have assembled the first synthetic virus. The US researchers built the infectious agent from scratch using the genome sequence for polio. The most amusing part is this snippit: 'To construct the virus, the researchers say they followed a recipe they downloaded from the internet and used gene sequences from a mail-order supplier.' Heck, don't we all have our own mail-order suppliers for gene sequences?"
I remember my BioChem classes (10+ years ago), and it seemed even back then that to some degree the technology was already there. It does make you wonder if this is truly the first one, or just the first one to be formally announced.
Ok, I give up, why you?
What if, say, a virus could be designed to destroy cancer cells? What if a virus could be designed to infect parasites? If the drug companies start doing this, it's only a matter of time before they can make viruses that can target disease cells extraordinarily effectively.
From the article: injected it into mice to demonstrate that it was active. The animals were paralysed and then died.
After decades of research, advances in biotechnology finally creates the long fabled "better mousetrap".
Everything will be taken away from you.
Ok, wtf, from the article we have these snippets:
Responding to criticisms that such research could lead to bioterrorists engineering new lethal viruses, the scientists behind the experiment said that only a few people had the knowledge to make it happen.
and then the rest of the article is filled with stuff like this?!
To construct the virus, the researchers say they followed a recipe they downloaded from the internet and used gene sequences from a mail-order supplier.
According to researcher Jeronimo Cello, the polio virus assembled in the laboratory is one of the simplest known viruses. "It was very easy to do," he said.
"We've known this could be done. We've known it was just a matter of time before it was done," he said.
Why shouldn't we be worried?
Have you hugged your Karma Whore today?
Great, another computer-engineered virus.
No wonder my roomate has been screaming "I send you this file in order to have your advice. See you later. Thanks. " while throwing porn at me and defacing my website. Fortunately, I was able to powercycle him with a car-battery.
What's it called?
9o7i0
kewl! I just made 5m4L7p0x
Release it dude!
How hard would it be to reduce this to a stepwise procedure that any reasonably intelligent, resourceful, dedicated person could carry out?
Making LSD from scratch required a lot of skill. But with detailed how-tos now widely available, practically anyone can make acid.
--
Socrates was asked where he was from. He replied not "Athens," but "The world."
Now we'll get hassled by spit kiddies - anyone that can follow a sequencing recepie will be generating these things.
This frightens me badly. Judging from the success that the FBI have had at tracing certain people involved in last year's Anthrax spree (at least one of the suspects was involved in biowarfare trials against blacks in South Africa in the '80s), I shudder to think what one pissed off reseacher could do and how the inept security agencies would not be able to do anything about it.
This would be a major, major, major pain in the ass to reproduce.
Doing this kind of work takes a lot of time and skill and equipment. It's not particularly hard to get the stuff, but you do need stuff, and the knowledge to go about doing it, and you're not just going to get that knowledge from nowhere.
This team worked for 2 years on this, and they are dedicated scientists with plenty of experience in this sort of work. How long would it take one person working in a home lab to start from scratch? Well over two years. If they don't know anything about Molecular Biology besides what they got out of high school (like your LSD-making example) probably at least triple that.
Everyone is very paranoid about the synthetic virus thing. This is hard work. No, what's more scary is the technology that's been around for three decades or so now, which is the ability to modify existing viruses. Why would someone really go to the trouble to make a new superbug from scratch when they can just use what nature's already done?
Or do you think that you can do a much better job than evolution has over millions of years?
Not that there aren't problems with creating superbugs (even Ebola and HIV have major weaknesses) and it wouldn't be easy, but it'd be far easier to modify something that already exists than it would to build something from scratch.
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
Be very afraid...
Ebola is scary scary stuff.
But it's also limited. Why is it that we haven't had a major outbreak all over the world, killing billions? Ebola is an RNA virus, which makes it very unstable (RNA is far less stable than DNA, and more prone to mutations). Because of this, Ebola was able to evolve in the first place in to something so deadly, due to its high mutation rate.
But Ebola never lasts too long, it comes in outbreaks, then it goes. That's because of two reasons. One is that the same instability which made it deadly also causes it to become ineffective at a quick pace. Mutations can work against these organisms too. The other reason is that it kills too quickly. It can't spread because people die before it gets a chance to move effectively. It's just too damn lethal.
Ebola is terrifying, but it's not all powerful. Any kind of pathogen has to balance infectivity with lethality, and Ebola is too far on the lethal side to be massively infective right now, thankfully.
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
That these scientists downloaded their instructions off the net and used ordered the sequence mail order is not at all the shock that this story portrays it as. Virtually every common technique in molecular biology can be accomplished with a pre-made "kit" from one of several major vendors (e.g. Sigma, BioRad, Qiagen). These kits contain all the necessary reagents and instructions for completing the procedure. Most of the companies that produce these kits also post the instructions on their websites in case you loose the printed copy. Any trained molecular biologist would have a pretty easy time recreating the "kit" from the directions and the ingredient list.
As for getting DNA by mail, that's standard practice at most research labs I've been involved with. It's more expensive than producing it yourself, but a hell of a lot more convenient. Many universities even have their own, "in house", sequence generation facilities that labs interact with by, you guessed it, inter-departmental mail.
I'd say the poster of this story was taken by the shock value of these statements (and perhaps they are more shocking in our terrorist-paranoid times), but in reality, there's nothing to be suprised by.
Cello, J., Paul, A.V. & Wimmer, E. Chemical synthesis of poliovirus cDNA: Generation of infectious virus in the absence of natural template. Science published online, doi:10.1126/science.1072266 (2002).
I can understand that the virus was created from scratch in the sense they it didn't come from mammalian cell infected by another polio virus, but my guess is that it is not from scratch in the sense of making a biological thing out of stuff from a chemistry set, because the "reagents" used in the process almost certainly had biological origin in their manufacturing.
Can someone familiar with the process comment on the source of the reagents?
biologists have been able to insert additional genes and knock out genes in organisms for quite a while. while this is the first time they've completely synthesized a virus, as real geeks of course you know that reinventing the wheel might be a good exercise but is hardly ever the most efficient way of reaching a goal - a bioterrorist / military would therefore never build a virus from scratch to use it as a biological weapon but use a perfectly working virus from the wild that already has the ability to infect human cells and maybe alter it to reach the "desired" effect. the techniques needed for that have been the microbiologists' bread and butter for years.
Do it yerself gene sequencing...ooops
I didn't create an aerosol AIDS virus. I said that I was just kidding in the post itself. All I'm saying is that in a few years someone will create a virus and put it up on the internet, just like the polio virus was up on the internet.
That seems like an important issue, why is it flamebait?
in my AP Biology class we made a strain of e.coli that was resistant to the antibiotic ampicilin. That was pretty fun. We also got them to turn green when they broke down lactose (or glactose...which ever is bigger...i forget).
I guess this is more impressive though. I want to be a bio major in college, so i hopefully will get to do some neat stuff like this.
Viruses are going to be extremely useful as vectors for genetic and cellular therapies in the future, to deliver therapeutic genetic material directly to the cells that need it.
While it is certainly possible that a designer virus might escape the laboratory, unless the virus was designed specifically as a deadly agent and endowed with the kind of viability inherent in naturally-evolved viruses there is no reason to believe that such viruses can or will be worse than those already existing "in the wild" which have had complete freedom to evolve for millennia.
In the future this technology can and likely will become a weapon in the hands of power-hungry individuals. Whether that future is near or far seems to me rather irrelevant. Humanity's lessons come in their due time, no sooner and no later. There might be some comfort in the fact that these technologies are being pursued, at least initially, in consideration of their benefits, by individuals in relatively free and rational non-hostile nations.
The cliche holds true: With great power (and knowledge) comes great responsibility! Those of use who do not control these technologies must learn to exercise faith. Not faith in mankind to act infallibly (or even responsibly) but faith that whatever comes is ultimately for our benefit in this continuum.
-- thinkyhead software and media
Sounds like the script kiddies of the microbiology world.
They just took ready-made, off the shelf parts & put them together
"A terrorist is someone who has a bomb but doesn't have an air force." -William Blum
I have a depressing feeling that my body is less secure than old Outlook Express, yet I cannot upgrade it. Until we have a patch, the vulnerability should not be disclosed :-)
There is an ongoing question of whether or not viruses are "alive". Clearly the fragments of DNA used to reconstruct the polio virus aren't, right?
If the "frankensteined" (a good word here) polio virus replicates and acts in other ways like a regular virus...
Did these guys create life from lifelessness?
W
-------------------
This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
1) "While rare, sporadic case reports of AIDS and sero-archaeological studies have documented human infections with HIV prior to 1970"
http://www.avert.org/his81_86.htm
Why wasn't it identified earlier? It's extremely easy to imagine a situation where hundreds or thousands of Africans were dying of AIDS for decades, though no one knew what they were dying from. It wouldn't have caused a great deal of alarm because deaths would be sporatic (occuring years apart) and deep inside the least medically advanced continent on the planet.
There is even some speculation about deaths as early as 1955 from AIDS, though no one is entirely sure if the "mystery disease" that killed back in 1955 was actually AIDS.
2) AIDS exists in chimpanzee populations, too. It is a different from the strain found in humans.
They should be very, very careful. You never know what might happen with mail-order gene sequences, or genetic material from eBay or such places.
And the brethren went away edified.
So what? Name one other country besides the US that has used a nuclear weapon on its enemy.
Bzzt, time's up.
The science to design a biological virus from scratch has been out there for over two years. Of course, nobody's gone about doing it other than these guys. There are enough loose ends in your typical high-level biohazard lab to give any wacko with a postage stamp the ability to mail you hepatitis, anthrax, or influenza. They don't need to mail order the parts and put it together at home.
Mordor...a magical, mythical land where women are more rare than dragons--but where every man would rather find a dragon
This proves AIDS could've been engineered?
And, the existence of fighter jets today proves that Napolean had them too, I guess.
Technology has come a long way. And you may be interested to know that there is speculation that AIDS killed someone as early as 1955. 1955 was also the year that DNA was discovered. Do the math.
As scary as this is, and for all the negative implications it has, I have to say that the research must continue, the reason being that it may lead to something positive in the future, such as a universal cure for virii. Remember what happened to Britain before WWII? They banned civilian explosives research and so when the time came Germany was massively far ahead. In the same way, the civilized world must continue their research so that hopefully the good guys have the answer before the bad guys have the problem.
I just hope I have the good guys and the bad guys straight. Deus Ex was a great game, but I sure don't want it to be real.
~Ben
Corewars
:-)
/op
and
More Core Wars
and
Even More Core Wars
Okay, not virii - but still programs that kill each other are kinda cool
Whats more is people are evolving these little programs to be better.
Oh they have a newsgroup too.( google alt.rec.corewar )
And you know what? This has already happened. That's how viruses can replicate inside us now. They have some of the same genes, stolen from host cells long long ago.
So, you have to ask yourself this: How is what I'm doing any different than what nature itself is doing? It's not really, and in fact, it's far more controllable and less likely to happen than in nature itself. In nature, the virus has less hurdles to go through to create this sort of doomsday scenario you're thinking of. With us, it's got to go through a lot more trouble. It's not impossible, but it's really really unlikely.
You also have to realize what I mean by "suicide gene". It's not something that will randomly kill whatever cell it's expressed in. We, and many many others, are using a standard gene taken from herpes called Thymidine Kinase (Tk). Humans have a version of this gene too, but it's far more picky than the herpes one. Basically, if you use the herpes gene, you can treat with a prodrug like gancyclovir, which normal human Tk will ignore, but herpes Tk will incorporate in to DNA. This will cause the DNA to be unable to replicate, and the cell will die. Note that this can't happen without administering the drug. The provides yet another major hurdle for the virus to overcome in order to attain its "deadly capability".
Stop being so scared of what humans are creating. Nature is doing a far better job of finding ways to kill you and the rest of humanity than I or any other molecular biologist could ever hope to devise.
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
No, they mean sequences.
You send off to a mail order place asking for a DNA sequence AGTTGTTGTTACGTT (or whatever), and they send you back 2uL of it in solution.
This has been pretty standard ever since I did my genetics honours work (1993).
-- Why should I question authority?!
Why do you say that?
My understanding of the poliovirus is that it's protein capsule is very highly conserved. The gene for its pieces is actually one polyprotein which is cleaved after the pieces interact. The pieces of the each subunit have to fit together perfectly, and altering the genetic structure of the gene can destroy those interactions, making it impossible for the virus to assemble correctly.
So the antibodies will probably be just fine. Besides, the Salk vaccine is heat-killed virus anyways, so you could probably apply the same treatment to your mutated virus, and have an effective vaccine. Or, since you know the makeup of your synthesized original, you could mess around with its genetic structure and create a live attenuated vaccine (another type which exists for polio, and can be more effective).
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
What happens if you cross a chicken virus with a human virus?
You get the next plague.
Those that understand my comments will remember the China scare from 2 years ago. Those that don't will think this is offtopic.
Just because the virus doesn't reproduce doesn't mean it can't transfer it's genetic payload to something that does.
I believe (English biologist and popularizer of science) Richard Dawkins refers to this logical fallacy as "the argument from personal incredulity". It's often used by creationists, as for instance, "I can't believe an organ as perfectly suited to its function as the eye was created without intelligent design", or "since each particular species of fig is fertilized by a particular species of fig-wasp that can itself only reproduce in its species of fig, I can't conceive of how new species of either fig or fig-wasp can evolve."
With all due respect to your biology teacher, it seems that Hamlet was right:
There are more things in heaven and earth, Jugulator,
Than are dreamt of in your teacher's philosophy.
Furthermore, a biology teacher ought to understand that evolution is NOT "nature's randomness". While a mutation may be randomly produced, evolution works AGAINST randomness -- and works precisly because it defeats randomness by conserving what is useful, and discarding what isn't.
If the AIDS virus is too complex for your teacher to believe it to be natural, what must he think of human origins?
I myself "can't conceive" how a mix of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen networked via electrical pulses, can possibly become self-aware. Yet I see examples everyday, and even occasionally on slashdot. And I don't go looking for an intelligent designer.
Opinions on the Twiddler2 hand-held keyboard?
I'm no virologist (or biologist for that matter), but it seems to me that there is nothing to fear here. Why would a bioterrorist "do it the hard way" when there are plenty of naturally ocurring and lethal pathogens out there? In fact, this kind of biotechnology is our best hope of a real defense against such weapons.
Biological warefare was practiced in ancient times. Even though they had no real disease theory, they know that hurling diseased corpses into walled fortifications would spread disease. They new that fouling water upstream of a city would spread disease. They did all this with no scientific knowledge of biology or pathology whatever.
Bombs are easier than bugs. Planes are easier than missiles. Radiation and disease are only probable attacks because of the primal fear they create. Biotechnology offers the best hope of defense against the latter (and maybe even a cure for the effects of the former). We need to know much more, sooner, not later.
The funny thing, the sequence for smallpox has been available for quite some time at NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information, as are the sequences for at least 2000 viruses and phages (per my last count).
I'm all for public knowledge of such sequences if they lead to productive research in the areas of disease control. However, with the current technology of being able to construct viruses from sequence data, it might be prudent to restrict such data to only respectable research centers.
I see it happening every weekend in NYC, but I'm sure it happens elsewhere. Let me explain my findings.
I've found that people between the ages of 19 to 30 are most likely to be infected by this virus. It usually always happens after drinking at bars or clubs. I even have been infected by this dastardly virus. After having quite a few beers and vodka cranberries, I've been know to get infected by virus that I've been calling the ILOVEYOU virus...It's usually only communicable to people of the opposite sex, unless you travel to the village. The more you drink, the more apparent this virus becomes. Good thing is that it usually lasts only about eight hours before it's effects wear off.
I'll get to the bottom of this. Will report back with more information on Sunday.
- grunby
IWAMB (I was a molecular biologist, until I discovered programming paid better, at least before the last round of layoffs...)
This news should not be surprising. The technology to synthesize multiple large genes has been around for years; and it has been known that the pieces could be combined in a host cell to yield whole, infectious virions. The novel thing here is that somebody has combined the two technologies, creating the polio genes synthetically before putting them into a host.
Two older articles describing the combination of cloned viral genes in vivo to make infectious virus are:
This article showed that the bovine herpesvirus genome could be cloned into a bacterial vector, maintained indefinitely, then reintroduced into cow cells to produce active virions.
This article showed that infectious rabies virus could be produced by putting cloned rabies genes into a suitable host.
Nowdays, if you have a gene sequence, you can synthesize it in pieces and assemble it (with modifications, if you choose) with PCR quite easily. You don't need any source material from the original organism. I synthesized a small gene from scratch myself, once, back when I was an underpaid M.S. in a biotech company.
Of course, I never tried this with a whole FREAKIN' POLIO VIRUS!!!!! WTF!!!! Didn't these guys ever read "The Stand"?!
-dexter ("Don't Fear the Reaper", my ass) riley
Now it all looks like low level "programming". How long until there's enough research so that scientists can start using high level languages for this?
It may sound stupid, but that's also what some hackers though about C or anything 20 years ago. Or even now (compiled vs. interpreted).
unfinished: (adj.)
The way these scientists did this was actually fairly "high level". They ordered premade genes (read: libraries or objects) from the mail and pieced them together correctly. Obviously there's a lot more to it than that, but that's the gist of it. The problem is that it still takes a lot of skill and knowhow, as well as time and energy to do this.
No matter what, you're still going to be cutting up DNA and splicing it together using enzymes.
No matter what, you've got to make sure you have enough DNA, which means either amplification by PCR or growing it up in cells and isolating it.
No matter what, you need to confirm what you've got, which takes more enzymes, gel equipment, and a good working knowledge of the sequence.
No matter what, you'd have to package it in to a virus, something that's not easy even with today's kits.
All of this can be done using "high level" stuff, kits for PCR, cloning, amplification, and isolation exist. You still need to understand what's happening, unless someone sends you a ready-to-make polio kit, you still have to know how to use the stuff. Having all of these tools lying around won't make the virus the same way having a copy of the gcc won't make you a programmer. You have to know how to use the tools.
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
(* Stop being so scared of what humans are creating. Nature is doing a far better job of finding ways to kill you and the rest of humanity than I or any other molecular biologist could ever hope to devise. *)
My understanding is that most viruses have evolved not to kill their host, otherwise they would shorten the time they can spread themselves around.
HIV is one of the rarer viruses that *does kill* its host fairly easily.
If the killer side is mixed in with the easy-to-spread features of say the common cold, then a killer cold could be put on the loose by some Osama-like madman (or madwomen. EOI=Equal Opportunity Insanity).
Table-ized A.I.
Those Sea Monkeys are the greatest marketing gimmick ever.
Almost nobody would buy them if the box said, "Mini-Shrimp Farm. Grow your own ugly pale little shrimp!"
The marketing deparment might be a-holes, but only an expert a-hole could BS people like that.
Microsoft should hire them to do something interesting with BSOD's. Make them *want* BSODs.
Table-ized A.I.
It'd really suck if the /. crowd worked out how to make their own Virus...
(http://www.access-music.de/)
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
.. make me want to paint monkeys on the walls, pluck out my teeth and travel to and from the past?
[2 scientists smoking crack]
Scientist 0: What should we make?
Scientist 1: How about Ebola?
Scientist 0: Too 'Tom Clancy.'
Scientist 1: Hmm. Smallpox?
Scientist 0: Nah. E-Coli?
Scientist 1: Not cool enough. Anthrax?
Scientist 0: Been there, done that.
Scientist 1 & 0: [at once] Polio!
You have to wonder what the crap goes through these guys minds. I mean, how is this a good idea? I'm all for scientific research and stuff, and yeah I know some of it is dangerous. But this seems to be tempting fate to me. What's the matter with making something *benign*?
It doesn't sound stupid. I watched the local University channel one day out of boredom and they were discussion how gene's are processed. I understood the PROCESS immediatly, the terminallogy, etc was new to me, and I must admit quickly forgotten. But the process itself made perfect sense. Meanwhile, the professor asks the class a question and they stared back blankly like the whole thing was beyond them. It probably was. They can memorize all the molecules, etc they want. But I doubt most of them can understand a process in the same manner as most programmers do. I think a mix of molecular biologist & computer programmer will be the scariest thing in the next 20 years...
It happened in Reston Virginia and it is what the book The Hot Zone by Richard Preston was about.
This strain was very closely reloated to Ebola Zaire, the most deadly strain of Ebola. It killsw about 95% of those who catch it. Ebola Reston, however, does not affect humans, only monkeys (where it is 100% fatal, at least in Reston). Lucky for us (the human race) because Ebola Reston is transmitted by air! All other strains of Ebola (and it's cousin Marburg) are transmitted through "exchange" of body fluids such as blood. And, of course, in this context "exchange" means some blood spashes in your eye, gets on a cut in your hand or a patient vomits his liquified inards on you.
The monkey handlers at the facility did become "infected" with Ebola Reston as their blood shows anti-bodies to it. But no human became sick because of exposure to the Reston strain.
That's the good news.
Bad news: nobody knows where Ebola/Marburg lives in the wild. It must have a host that it does not kill but no-one knows what it is. It could be insects, rodents, plants...who knows. Also, as it is highly mutable, perhaps the next mutation will be like Reston, but worse - an airbourne strain of Ebola as deadly as the Zaire strain spread throughout the world by a 757 flying out of Kinshasa to Heathrow and from Heathrow to...well EVERYWHERE. Ebola takes about 5 days to kill. In the bush this means it can usually burn out before it can get established in a big human population. In a major city it could spread fast enough to kill a large percentage of the human population. In Kikwit, the outbreak killed 235 people in a very secluded part of the African rainforest. I shudder to think what would happen if the same virus broke out in New York or Tokyo.
Given all that, the idea that someone has made polio in a lab is frightening. After all, Ebola is very closely related to the virus that caused measles.....
Never by hatred has hatred been appeased, only by kindness - the Buddha
I do have my own gene sequencing mail order company. I work for Northwestern University in the Chicago campus in a molecular bio lab and let me tell ya, I still remember the first time I designed 20 sequences, sent off a long list of a's c's t's and g's online and got tubes of them back in five days. I felt like a god.
"A witty saying proves nothing." - Voltaire
"Ooooooh" and "aaaaaah", that's how it always starts. But then later comes the running and screaming. I mean, life will find a way.
-- Ian Malcolm
Hmm, saying that "a virus follows a strategy for its own survival" is a bit too anthropomorfic(sp?) for me.
I agree with LS here the definition of life is too fuzzy to judge if a virus is alive or not.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_783 000/783533.stm
Please adjust your tin foil hat so that you can pick up a different conspiracy theory.
-jon
Remember Amalek.
I Tried that link, but got a page not found error. Aids in the 1930s? This is the first time I've read that. The theory that AIDS came from an American biological weapons lab was put forth by the former Soviet Union during the cold war, or so it has been said. I'm not saying that I believe it, but a lab created virus is no longer just science-fiction. This fact will lead imaginations to run wild.
The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
It's well-known that the Soviets created the "US made AIDS" rumor as disinformation during the Cold War.
-jon
Remember Amalek.